![]() | ||
A complete list of Salon's Money Week coverage
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Your money's no good here
Fantasy isle
D E P A R T M E N T S The Surreal Gourmet
Mondo Weirdo
Road Warrior
Table Talk
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - LA S T+W E E K Tuesday, Oct. 21, 1997 Women's dilemma
A full list of all
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
|
____Y O U R_M O N E Y ' S
____
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
_____
VISITING A CASHLESS CULTURE
_____
PROVIDES NEW PERSPECTIVES ON
_____
OUR SENSE OF MONEY AND SELF.
BY TIM CAHILL | "they went that-a-way, chief."
I kept walking, checking addresses. This was in New York City, on
Fifth Avenue, somewhere around 50th Street, and I was looking for an
unfamiliar address. My attire, I felt, may have been inappropriate.
"Chief! Hey, chief. I'm talking to you."
The man was walking behind me, breathing into my neck. "They went
that-a-way, chief."
I half turned. The person pursuing me wore a dirty trench coat and
a black watch cap. His curly red hair bunched out around his neck in that
peculiar '70s style reminiscent of Bozo the Clown.
"Who?" I asked. "Who went where?"
"The buffalo there, chief." He pointed west on 50th. "They went
that-a-way."
My unique attire had convinced this gentleman that I was a
particularly homely and pale-skinned American Indian. He was, I figured,
one of those panhandlers who feels that he must entertain you in exchange
for a handout. I was carrying a primitive, but unconcealed, weapon on my
shoulder. Something you might use to hunt buffalo.
"So," the man said, "you got any spare change for me, chief?"
Out where I come from -- a little town located between the Crow
and Blackfeet reservations -- you don't call anyone chief.
"Yeah," I said. "I got something for you. Just let me get my pack
off."
All this happened nearly 20 years ago, and the best way to
understand what I'm talking about is to put yourself in my boots. Like
this:
For reasons that, to this day, have never been adequately
explained, you've been given an assignment to travel out of state and out
of country to a place somewhere at the end of the earth and at the
beginning of time, where you are expected to make contact with persons
living in one of the few pre-technological, pre-industrial societies left
on the face of the planet. Upon your return, your job is to write an
article about this peculiar journey and the people you've met. In what
ways, the assigning magazine editors want to know, are these folks
different from us? In what ways are they similar?
Because you are relatively young and not the most experienced
reporter who has ever lived, these editors -- the sadistic bastards --
expect a report immediately upon your return from this strange sortie into
the past.
The editors work in New York City. You live in one of those big
square states out in the middle of fly-over country. The airplane tickets
they've sent you show a scheduled stop in New York on the return leg. Your
instructions are to deplane, cab into the city, meet with the editors for a
few hours, then get the hell out. Cab back to the airport and flee.
You figure this is a big deal in your reportorial career: the first
foreign assignment. The editors have never actually seen you and all the
arrangements have been made over the phone. The editors, you suspect,
probably wear pinstriped power suits. You yourself don't actually own a
suit and feel that these men and women, who have the power to withhold
payment, will undoubtedly peg you for a rube.
That's the deal. The question is: What clothes do you pack? Your
trip will take you to the high, wind-whipped plains of El Mundo Perdido,
the Lost World, the area where Venezuela, Brazil and Guyana all come
together on the map. It will be cold: near freezing some nights. It will
be humid and hot in the lowlands. In the mountains, which rise to 10,000
feet, it should rain every day. Or snow. To get where you are going, you
will have to walk. For weeks.
So you'll need a backpack. Stuff it full of tropical gear. And
for the cold and rain you'll want quick-drying long underwear, fleece
pullovers and pants, along with top quality rain gear. Freeze-dried food.
Stove. Fuel. Mountain boots. Sleeping bag, mat, tent. Dishes, utensils,
first-aid kit and water purifying tablets.
The question is: Are you going to take a sport coat, tie, slacks
and tasseled loafers for your meeting with the editors? Stuff this stuff
in the bottom of your backpack and hump it over the mountains and through
the rain? For one two-hour meeting?
Naaaahhhh.
Which is how, two decades ago, I came to be walking down
Fifth Avenue, in New York on a November afternoon, wearing a seriously
soiled rain jacket and my waffle stomper boots (still caked with red South
American mud). I was carrying a backpack and a set of lightweight
pre-industrial weapons that consisted of a weathered bow and a long, thin,
woven basket containing 20 arrows. None of the stuff I was carrying
fit in an airport locker, and anyway, the weight didn't bother me much.
I'd already carried it halfway around the Western Hemisphere.
N E X T+P A G E+| Reverse culture shock
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
ILLUSTRATION BY TRISHA KRAUSS
|
|
SALON | ARCHIVES | CONTACT US | TREATS | SEARCH | TABLE TALK
DAILY |
BLUE GLOW
|
BOOKS
|
COLUMNISTS |
COMICS |
FEATURE |
MEDIA CIRCUS
MOTHERS WHO THINK |
MUSIC
|
NEWSREAL
WEEKLY |
21ST |
ENTERTAINMENT |
WANDERLUST